
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Ed Rotberg, Rotberg Synthesizer
Ed Rotberg worked programmer in Atari’s coin-op division, where he worked on Atari Baseball, Battlezone, Blasteroids, Hard Drivin’, and other coin-op games. He consulted for the Atari consumer side, where he created demos for the Atari 800 — including working on the music for the in-store demo — and the Rotberg Synthesizer music software.
Check the show notes atAtariPodcast.com for downloads of the Rotberg Synthesizer and Rotberg Scrolling Marquee software (which I acquired and uploaded toarchive.org after this interview took place.)
This interview took place April 28, 2015.
Teaser quote:
“My good friend Dan Pliskin wrote a tune called Disco Dirge that we programmed into the earliest version of the Rotberg Synthesizer to play at the bachelor party, as kind of a joke. Because Chris who was getting married was a disco fan, he was a disco buff and we all *hated* disco.”
Links:
Rotberg’s sound article in Antic magazine
Article at archive.org
Version of the same article in Softside
Rotberg Scrolling Marquee
Rotberg Synthesizer
4.9
107107 ratings
Ed Rotberg, Rotberg Synthesizer
Ed Rotberg worked programmer in Atari’s coin-op division, where he worked on Atari Baseball, Battlezone, Blasteroids, Hard Drivin’, and other coin-op games. He consulted for the Atari consumer side, where he created demos for the Atari 800 — including working on the music for the in-store demo — and the Rotberg Synthesizer music software.
Check the show notes atAtariPodcast.com for downloads of the Rotberg Synthesizer and Rotberg Scrolling Marquee software (which I acquired and uploaded toarchive.org after this interview took place.)
This interview took place April 28, 2015.
Teaser quote:
“My good friend Dan Pliskin wrote a tune called Disco Dirge that we programmed into the earliest version of the Rotberg Synthesizer to play at the bachelor party, as kind of a joke. Because Chris who was getting married was a disco fan, he was a disco buff and we all *hated* disco.”
Links:
Rotberg’s sound article in Antic magazine
Article at archive.org
Version of the same article in Softside
Rotberg Scrolling Marquee
Rotberg Synthesizer
81 Listeners
49 Listeners
18 Listeners
1,169 Listeners
311 Listeners
38 Listeners
100 Listeners
41 Listeners
130 Listeners
22 Listeners
1,366 Listeners
82 Listeners
99 Listeners
28 Listeners
2 Listeners